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Piano Concerto No. 1 (Brahms)

The Piano Concerto No. 1 in D minor, Op. 15, is a work for piano and orchestra completed by Johannes Brahms in 1858. The composer gave the work's public debut in Hanover, the following year.[1] It was his first-performed orchestral work, and (in its third performance) his first orchestral work performed to audience approval.

Piano Concerto in D minor
No. 1
by Johannes Brahms
The composer in 1853
Opus15
Composed1858 (1858)
Performed22 January 1859 (1859-01-22): Hannover
Movementsthree

Form

External audio
Performed by Krystian Zimerman with the Berlin Philharmonic under Simon Rattle
  I. Maestoso - Poco più moderato
  II. Adagio
  III. Rondo (Allegro non troppo)

This concerto is written in the traditional three movements and is approximately 40 to 50 minutes long.

  1. Maestoso (D minor) (c. 20 minutes)
    The first movement is in sonata form, divided into five sections: orchestral introduction, exposition, development, recapitulation, and coda. This movement is large, lasting between 20 and 25 minutes. Although without a cadenza, the strict adherence to forms used in the Classical Period earned Brahms a reputation for being musically "conservative", but his innovative harmonies and chord-progressions were hardly that. The theme heavily makes use of arpeggiated chords and trills. Within the orchestral introduction other themes are introduced, and the thematic material is further developed by both orchestra and soloist.
     
  2. Adagio (D major) (c. 13 minutes)
    This movement is in a ternary form, with the theme being introduced by bassoons.
     
  3. Rondo: Allegro non troppo (D minor → D major) (c. 11 minutes)
    The structure of the Rondo finale is similar to that of the rondo of Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3. There are three themes present in this rondo; the second theme may be considered a strong variation of the first. The third theme is introduced in the episode but is never explicitly developed by the soloist, instead the soloist is "integrated into the orchestral effect". A cadenza follows the bulk of the rondo, with an extensive coda that develops the first and third themes appearing afterward. The coda is in the parallel major, D major.
     

Instrumentation

The piece is scored for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets (B and A), 2 bassoons, 4 horns (initially 2 in D, 2 in B bass), 2 trumpets (D), timpani (D and A), piano and strings.[2]

Overview

Roles of Joachim and Clara Schumann

Brahms was himself a professional-level pianist who had first highly impressed the leading violinist Joseph Joachim, who gave him a letter of introduction to Robert Schumann. Brahms and Joachim became close friends for life. In 1853 Brahms had aroused the greatest admiration from Schumann and his wife Clara, a turning point in Brahms's career, by playing for them some of his own solo piano pieces. Clara was a leading concert pianist and a composer. She and Brahms began a lifelong friendship, which became more important when Robert was committed to an asylum in 1854 and died in 1856. Clara, 14 years older than Brahms, wrote of him in her diary in 1854 "I love him like a son."[3] Brahms's love of her was respectful, more complex and conflicted, but he much valued her opinions and advice.

Composition

During the course of composition, the work passed through different forms. In 1854 it began as a sonata for two pianos. By July 27 of that year it was being transformed into a four-movement symphony.[4] Brahms sought advice from his close friend Julius Otto Grimm. "Brahms was in the habit of showing his orchestrations to Grimm, who, with his conservatory training, was better schooled in orchestration."[4] After incorporating some of Grimm's suggestions Brahms then sent the orchestrated first movement to Joachim. Evidently Joachim liked it. Brahms wrote to him 12 September 1854 "As usual, you've viewed my symphony movement through rose-coloured spectacles – I definitely want to change and improve it; there's still a great deal lacking in the composition, and I don't even understand as much of the orchestration as appears in the movement, since the best of it I owe to Grimm."[5] By January 1855 Brahms had composed second and third movements, for piano.[6] He ultimately decided to make the work a concerto for piano, his favored instrument, in 1855–56, still consulting friends about the orchestration. Avins writes that "In all the many volumes of correspondence to and from Brahms, nothing quite approaches the letters he and Joachim exchanged over his First Piano Concerto (there are more than twenty of them) ... Joachim's answers, lengthy, detailed, thoughtful, and skilled, are extraordinary testimonials to his own talent, and to the awe and admiration he felt for his friend."[7] Brahms only retained the original material from the work's first movement; the remaining movements were discarded and two new ones were composed, a second movement adagio, which Gál called "calm and dreamlike", and a third movement rondo, in which Gál heard "healthy, exuberant creativity".[8] The result was a work in the more usual three-movement concerto structure. As late as early February 1858, Joachim sent the manuscript back to Brahms "completely revised", hoping that he liked the reorchestrated sections.[9] Brahms did not complete his Symphony No. 1 until 1876.

Piano duo versions

Brahms also wrote a two-piano arrangement, which was essentially the original score before orchestration. In 1853 Robert Schumann had bought a grand piano for Clara so that the household had two.[10] In September 1856 Brahms sent Clara the first movement of his new piano concerto in a two-piano score. She wrote in her diary on 1 October 1856 that Brahms had "composed an excellent first movement" for a piano concerto, and "I am delighted with its greatness of conception and the tenderness of its melodies."[11] Then on 18 October, "Johannes has finished his concerto - we have played it several times on two pianos."[12]

In 1862 Rieter-Biedermann, publisher of the Concerto, requested that Brahms write a piano four-hands arrangement. Publishers liked piano four-hands arrangements, which could be sold to customers owning only one piano. However, Brahms declined, saying it would not be "practical" for him.[13] Two years later Brahms decided he needed the money he would get for it, so he made the arrangement.[14][15]

Early performances

Clara heard a rehearsal of the concerto in Hanover in March 1858, nine months before the premiere there, and wrote to a friend that it "went very well ... Almost all of it sounds beautiful, some parts far more beautiful even than Johannes himself imagined or expected."[16] The concerto was first performed on January 22, 1859, in Hanover, Germany, when Brahms was just 25 years old. The audience received it coldly.[17] The second performance, five days later, was in Leipzig. The Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra was a leading one in Germany. It had premiered Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 5 ("Emperor") in 1811. Felix Mendelssohn conducted the Gewandhaus from 1835 until his death in 1847. During his tenure the orchestra premiered Schubert's Symphony No. 9 ("Great Symphony"), after Schubert's death; Robert Schumann had unearthed a manuscript in Vienna and given a copy to Mendelssohn. The orchestra also premiered Mendelssohn's own Symphony No. 3 ("Scottish") and violin concerto. It seems that after Mendelssohn's passing, "standards in Leipzig declined".[18] Still, the Gewandhaus remained a highly prestigious orchestra. Its concertmaster, Ferdinand David, had invited Brahms to have his concerto performed there.[19] Brahms, who served as piano soloist, had two rehearsals in Leipzig with the orchestra. He thought he had played the concerto "significantly better than in Hanover, the orchestra outstandingly," but at the end only a few in the audience tried to clap and were soon overwhelmed by hissing.[20] The concerto had only one encouraging review, from the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, Robert Schumann's former journal; it was "savaged" by other critics.[21] Brahms wrote to Joachim "I am only experimenting and feeling my way,"[1] adding sadly, "all the same, the hissing was rather too much."[1]

The third performance was 24 March 1859 in a concert with the Hamburg Philharmonic at which Joachim and the leading baritone Julius Stockhausen also performed. The concert was a great success. Each of the three leading performers was recalled for more applause. Brahms wrote to Clara that Joachim [as concertmaster?] "rehearsed my concerto and played it marvelously well ... In short, the Leipzig reviews have done no damage" [in Hamburg]. Heller wrote a "highly commendatory review".[21]

Brahms revised the concerto (much less extensively than before) and in August 1859 sent the revised manuscript to Clara, who replied that she had "hours of joy" from it.[22] In September she wrote that the adagio is "exquisite" and "beautiful". She said the first movement "gave me great pleasure" although she did not like "some things in it" she had criticized before, but Brahms had not changed them. The fourth performance of the concerto (and first of the new revision) was with the Hamburg Philharmonic conducted by Georg Dietrich Otten and was not a success.[23]

Another performance came 3 December 1861, again with the Hamburg Philharmonic, this time with Brahms conducting and Clara as solo pianist. She wrote in her diary "I was certainly the happiest person in the whole room ... the joy of the work so overcame me", but "the public understood nothing and felt nothing, otherwise it must have shown proper respect."[24] By then the concerto had been performed in concert five times, a success with only one of the audiences. Brahms and Clara both put it aside for some years.

First successfully performed orchestral piece

The First Serenade, the second Brahms orchestral piece to be played in concert, had its première on 3 March 1860, with success. Before that the concerto had been performed three times, a success the third time, 24 March 1859, before the serenade by about a year.

Publication

In the summer of 1860 Brahms submitted to the publishers Breitkopf & Härtel five pieces, the Concerto, his first Serenade, two choral works, and "Eight Songs and Romances", Op. 14. Only the Serenade was accepted. The Concerto was rejected based on its bad reception in Leipzig. No comment was made on the other three pieces.[25] Brahms then submitted the four rejected pieces to a Swiss publisher, Melchior Rieter-Biedermann, who accepted them, and later published many other Brahms pieces, including the German Requiem.[25]

Later performances

In November 1865 Brahms performed the concerto in Karlsruhe successfully, being "recalled" for more applause.[26] A group of "friends of music", some of whom had missed the concert, engaged the orchestra players and organized a "private concert" on Sunday morning at which Brahms's Piano Quartet No. 2 was also performed. Brahms wrote to Clara that "The musicians were exceedingly devoted to me, so that the whole affair was most agreeable."[27]

In 1874 Clara played the solo part in a performance in a Gewandhaus concert in Leipzig, the first performance of the concerto there since the January 1859 débacle.[28] Brahms himself was invited by a member of the Gewandhaus Board of Directors and performed the concerto in Leipzig 1 January 1878. The concerto "fared only slightly better this time" than it had in 1859.[29]

Hans von Bülow was a concert pianist and highly regarded conductor.[30] He wrote to Brahms in the spring of 1882 "I am to participate in a Rhine Musical festival ... in Aachen ... I plan to play your D minor [concerto] well, or at least do my best ... with a few days of seclusion to prepare."[31] Brahms replied "You ... can be proud of yourself ... to bring to a music festival such a work of ill repute as the D minor concerto."[32] It was no secret that von Bülow admired Brahms, having called him the third of the Three Bs. In 1881 Brahms finished his second piano concerto. Thereafter von Bülow took concert tours "with both Brahms's piano concertos, sometimes conducting from the keyboard."[33]

Biographical points

Brahms's biographers often note that the first sketches for the dramatic opening movement followed quickly on the heels of the 1854 suicide attempt of the composer's dear friend and mentor, Robert Schumann, an event which caused great anguish for Brahms. He finally completed the concerto two years after Schumann's death in 1856.

The degree to which Brahms's personal experience is embedded in the concerto is hard to gauge since several other factors also influenced the musical expression of the piece. The epic mood links the work explicitly to the tradition of the Beethoven symphony that Brahms sought to emulate. The finale of the concerto, for example, is clearly modeled on the last movement of Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 3, while the concerto's key of D minor is the same as both Beethoven's Symphony No. 9 and Mozart's dramatic Piano Concerto No. 20.

Symphonic and chamber techniques

The work reflects Brahms's effort to combine the piano with the orchestra as equal partners in a symphonic-scale structure, in emulation of the classical concertos of Mozart and Beethoven. It thus differs from earlier Romantic concertos, where the orchestra effectively accompanied the pianist. Even for the young Brahms, the concerto-as-showpiece had little appeal. Instead, he enlisted both orchestra and soloist in the service of the musical ideas; technically difficult passages in the concerto are never gratuitous, but extend and develop the thematic material. Such an approach is thoroughly in keeping with Brahms's artistic temperament, but also reflects the concerto's symphonic origins and ambitions. His effort drew on both chamber music techniques and the pre-classical Baroque concerto grosso, an approach that later was fully realized in Brahms's Piano Concerto No. 2. This first concerto also demonstrates Brahms's particular interest in scoring for the timpani and the horn, both of whose parts are difficult and prominent.

Although composed in Brahms's youth, this concerto is a mature work that points forward to his later concertos and his Symphony No. 1. Most notable are its scale and grandeur, as well as the thrilling technical difficulties it presents. As time passed, the work grew in popularity until it was recognized as a masterpiece. Brahms biographer Styra Avins calls it a "great" piece.[34] Alfred Brendel considers it among the "purest Brahms", stating that to "...particularly the D-Minor Concerto, goes my love."[35]

Selected performances

Use in film

The first movement of the concerto was used to reinforce particularly dramatic moments in the British film The L-Shaped Room (1963), in a recording by Peter Katin.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c Ewen, David (March 2007). Music for the Millions. p. 108. ISBN 978-1-4067-3926-8. Retrieved 18 December 2009.
  2. ^ "Piano Concerto No. 1 (Johannes Brahms)". LA Phil. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  3. ^ Litzmann, p. 94
  4. ^ a b Brahms and Avins, p. 50, note 44
  5. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 61
  6. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 85
  7. ^ Brahms and Avins, pp. 146–147
  8. ^ Gál, pp. 114–117
  9. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 164
  10. ^ Litzmann, p. 39
  11. ^ Litzmann, p. 146
  12. ^ Litzmann, p. 147
  13. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 245
  14. ^ Piano Concerto No. 1 in D Major; The Composer's Original Arrangement for Piano Four Hands, by Brahms, reprint of 1864 edition
  15. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 288. Later, Brahms's Hungarian Dances for piano four-hands were highly profitable for him and his publisher Simrock.
  16. ^ Litzmann, p. 159
  17. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 187
  18. ^ Campbell, Margaret (1981), The Great Violinists, Doubleday, Garden City, NY, p. 76
  19. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 180
  20. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 189
  21. ^ a b Brahms and Avins, p. 190
  22. ^ Litzmann, pp. 172–173.
  23. ^ Brahms and Avins, pp. 217, 222–223; Avins puts the fault on Otten.
  24. ^ Litzmann, pp. 200–201
  25. ^ a b Brahms and Avins, p. 224
  26. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 335
  27. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 337
  28. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 190; Avins does not comment on how the 1874 performance was received
  29. ^ Brahms and Avins, p. 531
  30. ^ In 1887–1892 he conducted the Berlin Philharmonic, founded not long before in 1882, which gained repute under him.
  31. ^ Hans von Bülow's Letters to Johannes Brahms: A Research Edition, ed. Hans-Joachim Hinrichsen, transl. Cynthia Klohr, 2012, Scarecrow Press, Lanham, MD, p. 11
  32. ^ Brahms and Avins, pp. 593–594
  33. ^ Phillip Huscher, "About the cover", Harmony: Forum of the Symphony Orchestra Institute, 2012 [1]
  34. ^ Avins, Styra, "Johannes Brahms", in Oxford Companion to Music, ed. Alison Latham, Oxford University Press, 2003, ISBN 978-0-19-866212-9
  35. ^ The New York Review of Books, July 11, 2013
  36. ^ Hunt J. A Gallic Trio - Charles Munch, Paul Paray, Pierre Monteux. John Hunt, 2003, 2009, p165
  37. ^ Conrad Wilson: Notes on Brahms: 20 Crucial Works (Edinboro, Saint Andrew Press: 2005) p. 16
  38. ^ Haywood, Tony. "BRAHMS Piano Concertos Freire - CD review". www.musicweb-international.com. MusicWeb International. Retrieved 17 February 2019.

Sources

  • Brahms, Johannes; Avins, Styra (1997). Johannes Brahms: Life and Letters at Google Books. selected and annotated by Styra Avins, transl. by Josef Eisinger and S. Avins, Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-924773-0.
  • Frisch, Walter, and Karnes, Kevin C., eds., Brahms and His World (Revised Edition), Princeton University Press, 2009, a Google book.
  • Gál, Hans (1971), Johannes Brahms: His Work and Personality, translated by Joseph Stein, Knopf, New York.
  • Litzmann, Berthold (1913), Clara Schumann: An Artist's Life based on material found in Diaries and Letters, Translated and abridged from the fourth German edition by Grace E. Hadow, MacMillan, London, and Breitkopf and Härtel, Leipzig, 1913, vol. 2. (Vol. 1 is about her life up to 1850, before meeting Brahms in 1853.)'

External links

piano, concerto, brahms, piano, concerto, minor, work, piano, orchestra, completed, johannes, brahms, 1858, composer, gave, work, public, debut, hanover, following, year, first, performed, orchestral, work, third, performance, first, orchestral, work, performe. The Piano Concerto No 1 in D minor Op 15 is a work for piano and orchestra completed by Johannes Brahms in 1858 The composer gave the work s public debut in Hanover the following year 1 It was his first performed orchestral work and in its third performance his first orchestral work performed to audience approval Piano Concerto in D minorNo 1by Johannes BrahmsThe composer in 1853Opus15Composed1858 1858 Performed22 January 1859 1859 01 22 HannoverMovementsthree Contents 1 Form 2 Instrumentation 3 Overview 3 1 Roles of Joachim and Clara Schumann 3 2 Composition 3 3 Piano duo versions 3 4 Early performances 3 4 1 First successfully performed orchestral piece 3 5 Publication 3 6 Later performances 3 7 Biographical points 3 8 Symphonic and chamber techniques 4 Selected performances 5 Use in film 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 External linksForm EditExternal audioPerformed by Krystian Zimerman with the Berlin Philharmonic under Simon Rattle I Maestoso Poco piu moderato II Adagio III Rondo Allegro non troppo This concerto is written in the traditional three movements and is approximately 40 to 50 minutes long Maestoso D minor c 20 minutes The first movement is in sonata form divided into five sections orchestral introduction exposition development recapitulation and coda This movement is large lasting between 20 and 25 minutes Although without a cadenza the strict adherence to forms used in the Classical Period earned Brahms a reputation for being musically conservative but his innovative harmonies and chord progressions were hardly that The theme heavily makes use of arpeggiated chords and trills Within the orchestral introduction other themes are introduced and the thematic material is further developed by both orchestra and soloist Adagio D major c 13 minutes This movement is in a ternary form with the theme being introduced by bassoons Rondo Allegro non troppo D minor D major c 11 minutes The structure of the Rondo finale is similar to that of the rondo of Beethoven s Piano Concerto No 3 There are three themes present in this rondo the second theme may be considered a strong variation of the first The third theme is introduced in the episode but is never explicitly developed by the soloist instead the soloist is integrated into the orchestral effect A cadenza follows the bulk of the rondo with an extensive coda that develops the first and third themes appearing afterward The coda is in the parallel major D major Instrumentation EditThe piece is scored for 2 flutes 2 oboes 2 clarinets B and A 2 bassoons 4 horns initially 2 in D 2 in B bass 2 trumpets D timpani D and A piano and strings 2 Overview EditRoles of Joachim and Clara Schumann Edit Brahms was himself a professional level pianist who had first highly impressed the leading violinist Joseph Joachim who gave him a letter of introduction to Robert Schumann Brahms and Joachim became close friends for life In 1853 Brahms had aroused the greatest admiration from Schumann and his wife Clara a turning point in Brahms s career by playing for them some of his own solo piano pieces Clara was a leading concert pianist and a composer She and Brahms began a lifelong friendship which became more important when Robert was committed to an asylum in 1854 and died in 1856 Clara 14 years older than Brahms wrote of him in her diary in 1854 I love him like a son 3 Brahms s love of her was respectful more complex and conflicted but he much valued her opinions and advice Composition Edit During the course of composition the work passed through different forms In 1854 it began as a sonata for two pianos By July 27 of that year it was being transformed into a four movement symphony 4 Brahms sought advice from his close friend Julius Otto Grimm Brahms was in the habit of showing his orchestrations to Grimm who with his conservatory training was better schooled in orchestration 4 After incorporating some of Grimm s suggestions Brahms then sent the orchestrated first movement to Joachim Evidently Joachim liked it Brahms wrote to him 12 September 1854 As usual you ve viewed my symphony movement through rose coloured spectacles I definitely want to change and improve it there s still a great deal lacking in the composition and I don t even understand as much of the orchestration as appears in the movement since the best of it I owe to Grimm 5 By January 1855 Brahms had composed second and third movements for piano 6 He ultimately decided to make the work a concerto for piano his favored instrument in 1855 56 still consulting friends about the orchestration Avins writes that In all the many volumes of correspondence to and from Brahms nothing quite approaches the letters he and Joachim exchanged over his First Piano Concerto there are more than twenty of them Joachim s answers lengthy detailed thoughtful and skilled are extraordinary testimonials to his own talent and to the awe and admiration he felt for his friend 7 Brahms only retained the original material from the work s first movement the remaining movements were discarded and two new ones were composed a second movement adagio which Gal called calm and dreamlike and a third movement rondo in which Gal heard healthy exuberant creativity 8 The result was a work in the more usual three movement concerto structure As late as early February 1858 Joachim sent the manuscript back to Brahms completely revised hoping that he liked the reorchestrated sections 9 Brahms did not complete his Symphony No 1 until 1876 Piano duo versions Edit Brahms also wrote a two piano arrangement which was essentially the original score before orchestration In 1853 Robert Schumann had bought a grand piano for Clara so that the household had two 10 In September 1856 Brahms sent Clara the first movement of his new piano concerto in a two piano score She wrote in her diary on 1 October 1856 that Brahms had composed an excellent first movement for a piano concerto and I am delighted with its greatness of conception and the tenderness of its melodies 11 Then on 18 October Johannes has finished his concerto we have played it several times on two pianos 12 In 1862 Rieter Biedermann publisher of the Concerto requested that Brahms write a piano four hands arrangement Publishers liked piano four hands arrangements which could be sold to customers owning only one piano However Brahms declined saying it would not be practical for him 13 Two years later Brahms decided he needed the money he would get for it so he made the arrangement 14 15 Early performances Edit Clara heard a rehearsal of the concerto in Hanover in March 1858 nine months before the premiere there and wrote to a friend that it went very well Almost all of it sounds beautiful some parts far more beautiful even than Johannes himself imagined or expected 16 The concerto was first performed on January 22 1859 in Hanover Germany when Brahms was just 25 years old The audience received it coldly 17 The second performance five days later was in Leipzig The Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra was a leading one in Germany It had premiered Beethoven s Piano Concerto No 5 Emperor in 1811 Felix Mendelssohn conducted the Gewandhaus from 1835 until his death in 1847 During his tenure the orchestra premiered Schubert s Symphony No 9 Great Symphony after Schubert s death Robert Schumann had unearthed a manuscript in Vienna and given a copy to Mendelssohn The orchestra also premiered Mendelssohn s own Symphony No 3 Scottish and violin concerto It seems that after Mendelssohn s passing standards in Leipzig declined 18 Still the Gewandhaus remained a highly prestigious orchestra Its concertmaster Ferdinand David had invited Brahms to have his concerto performed there 19 Brahms who served as piano soloist had two rehearsals in Leipzig with the orchestra He thought he had played the concerto significantly better than in Hanover the orchestra outstandingly but at the end only a few in the audience tried to clap and were soon overwhelmed by hissing 20 The concerto had only one encouraging review from the Neue Zeitschrift fur Musik Robert Schumann s former journal it was savaged by other critics 21 Brahms wrote to Joachim I am only experimenting and feeling my way 1 adding sadly all the same the hissing was rather too much 1 The third performance was 24 March 1859 in a concert with the Hamburg Philharmonic at which Joachim and the leading baritone Julius Stockhausen also performed The concert was a great success Each of the three leading performers was recalled for more applause Brahms wrote to Clara that Joachim as concertmaster rehearsed my concerto and played it marvelously well In short the Leipzig reviews have done no damage in Hamburg Heller wrote a highly commendatory review 21 Brahms revised the concerto much less extensively than before and in August 1859 sent the revised manuscript to Clara who replied that she had hours of joy from it 22 In September she wrote that the adagio is exquisite and beautiful She said the first movement gave me great pleasure although she did not like some things in it she had criticized before but Brahms had not changed them The fourth performance of the concerto and first of the new revision was with the Hamburg Philharmonic conducted by Georg Dietrich Otten and was not a success 23 Another performance came 3 December 1861 again with the Hamburg Philharmonic this time with Brahms conducting and Clara as solo pianist She wrote in her diary I was certainly the happiest person in the whole room the joy of the work so overcame me but the public understood nothing and felt nothing otherwise it must have shown proper respect 24 By then the concerto had been performed in concert five times a success with only one of the audiences Brahms and Clara both put it aside for some years First successfully performed orchestral piece Edit The First Serenade the second Brahms orchestral piece to be played in concert had its premiere on 3 March 1860 with success Before that the concerto had been performed three times a success the third time 24 March 1859 before the serenade by about a year Publication Edit In the summer of 1860 Brahms submitted to the publishers Breitkopf amp Hartel five pieces the Concerto his first Serenade two choral works and Eight Songs and Romances Op 14 Only the Serenade was accepted The Concerto was rejected based on its bad reception in Leipzig No comment was made on the other three pieces 25 Brahms then submitted the four rejected pieces to a Swiss publisher Melchior Rieter Biedermann who accepted them and later published many other Brahms pieces including the German Requiem 25 Later performances Edit In November 1865 Brahms performed the concerto in Karlsruhe successfully being recalled for more applause 26 A group of friends of music some of whom had missed the concert engaged the orchestra players and organized a private concert on Sunday morning at which Brahms s Piano Quartet No 2 was also performed Brahms wrote to Clara that The musicians were exceedingly devoted to me so that the whole affair was most agreeable 27 In 1874 Clara played the solo part in a performance in a Gewandhaus concert in Leipzig the first performance of the concerto there since the January 1859 debacle 28 Brahms himself was invited by a member of the Gewandhaus Board of Directors and performed the concerto in Leipzig 1 January 1878 The concerto fared only slightly better this time than it had in 1859 29 Hans von Bulow was a concert pianist and highly regarded conductor 30 He wrote to Brahms in the spring of 1882 I am to participate in a Rhine Musical festival in Aachen I plan to play your D minor concerto well or at least do my best with a few days of seclusion to prepare 31 Brahms replied You can be proud of yourself to bring to a music festival such a work of ill repute as the D minor concerto 32 It was no secret that von Bulow admired Brahms having called him the third of the Three Bs In 1881 Brahms finished his second piano concerto Thereafter von Bulow took concert tours with both Brahms s piano concertos sometimes conducting from the keyboard 33 Biographical points Edit Brahms s biographers often note that the first sketches for the dramatic opening movement followed quickly on the heels of the 1854 suicide attempt of the composer s dear friend and mentor Robert Schumann an event which caused great anguish for Brahms He finally completed the concerto two years after Schumann s death in 1856 The degree to which Brahms s personal experience is embedded in the concerto is hard to gauge since several other factors also influenced the musical expression of the piece The epic mood links the work explicitly to the tradition of the Beethoven symphony that Brahms sought to emulate The finale of the concerto for example is clearly modeled on the last movement of Beethoven s Piano Concerto No 3 while the concerto s key of D minor is the same as both Beethoven s Symphony No 9 and Mozart s dramatic Piano Concerto No 20 Symphonic and chamber techniques Edit The work reflects Brahms s effort to combine the piano with the orchestra as equal partners in a symphonic scale structure in emulation of the classical concertos of Mozart and Beethoven It thus differs from earlier Romantic concertos where the orchestra effectively accompanied the pianist Even for the young Brahms the concerto as showpiece had little appeal Instead he enlisted both orchestra and soloist in the service of the musical ideas technically difficult passages in the concerto are never gratuitous but extend and develop the thematic material Such an approach is thoroughly in keeping with Brahms s artistic temperament but also reflects the concerto s symphonic origins and ambitions His effort drew on both chamber music techniques and the pre classical Baroque concerto grosso an approach that later was fully realized in Brahms s Piano Concerto No 2 This first concerto also demonstrates Brahms s particular interest in scoring for the timpani and the horn both of whose parts are difficult and prominent Although composed in Brahms s youth this concerto is a mature work that points forward to his later concertos and his Symphony No 1 Most notable are its scale and grandeur as well as the thrilling technical difficulties it presents As time passed the work grew in popularity until it was recognized as a masterpiece Brahms biographer Styra Avins calls it a great piece 34 Alfred Brendel considers it among the purest Brahms stating that to particularly the D Minor Concerto goes my love 35 Selected performances EditWilhelm Backhaus with Sir Adrian Boult and the BBC Symphony Orchestra November 28 1932 Vladimir Horowitz with Arturo Toscanini and the New York Philharmonic March 17 1935 Artur Schnabel with George Szell and the London Philharmonic Orchestra 1938 Arthur Rubinstein with Fritz Reiner and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra 1954 Myra Hess with Dimitri Mitropoulos and the New York Philharmonic 1955 Julius Katchen with Pierre Monteux and the London Symphony Orchestra recorded Walthamstow Assembly Hall 24 25 March 1959 issued on Decca LXT5546 SXL2172 36 Leon Fleisher with George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra 1958 Clifford Curzon with George Szell and the London Symphony Orchestra 1962 Glenn Gould with Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic from a concert of April 6 1962 famous for Bernstein s introductory remarks to the audience in which he said he was not in agreement with Gould s remarkably broad tempi and frequent departures from Brahms dynamic indications Van Cliburn with Erich Leinsdorf and the Boston Symphony Orchestra 1964 Bruno Leonardo Gelber with Franz Paul Decker and the Munich Philharmonic Orchestra June 1965 winner of the Grand Prix Du Disque Claudio Arrau with Bernard Haitink and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra 1970 Emil Gilels 37 with Eugen Jochum and the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra 1972 Arthur Rubinstein with Bernard Haitink and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra 1973 video Alexis Weissenberg with Carlo Maria Giulini and the London Symphony Orchestra 1973 EMI Electrola Radu Lupu with Edo de Waart and the London Symphony Orchestra 1975 Arthur Rubinstein with Zubin Mehta and the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra 1976 Maurizio Pollini with Claudio Abbado and the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra 1977 Deutsche Grammophon Sandor Falvai with Antal Jancsovics and the Hungarian State Orchestra 1978 Vladimir Ashkenazy with Bernard Haitink and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra 1983 Emanuel Ax with James Levine and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra 1984 Stephen Kovacevich with Sir Colin Davis and the London Symphony Orchestra 1985 Krystian Zimerman with Leonard Bernstein and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra 1985 Deutsche Grammophon Horacio Gutierrez with Andre Previn and the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra 1991 Krystian Zimerman with Sir Simon Rattle and the Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra 2005 Helene Grimaud with Michael Gielen and the Southwest German Radio Symphony Orchestra SWR Sinfonieorchester Baden Baden und Freiburg April 17 2005 Nelson Freire with Riccardo Chailly and the Gewandhausorchester 2006 Decca 38 Norman Krieger with JoAnn Falletta and the Virginia Symphony Orchestra 2008 Maurizio Pollini with Christian Thielemann and the Staatskapelle Dresden October 14 2011 Deutsche Grammophon Helene Grimaud with Andris Nelsons and the Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks 2013 Deutsche Grammophon Daniel Barenboim with Gustavo Dudamel and the Staatskapelle Berlin 2015 Deutsche Grammophon Use in film EditThe first movement of the concerto was used to reinforce particularly dramatic moments in the British film The L Shaped Room 1963 in a recording by Peter Katin References EditCitations Edit a b c Ewen David March 2007 Music for the Millions p 108 ISBN 978 1 4067 3926 8 Retrieved 18 December 2009 Piano Concerto No 1 Johannes Brahms LA Phil Retrieved 2022 11 29 Litzmann p 94 a b Brahms and Avins p 50 note 44 Brahms and Avins p 61 Brahms and Avins p 85 Brahms and Avins pp 146 147 Gal pp 114 117 Brahms and Avins p 164 Litzmann p 39 Litzmann p 146 Litzmann p 147 Brahms and Avins p 245 Piano Concerto No 1 in D Major The Composer s Original Arrangement for Piano Four Hands by Brahms reprint of 1864 edition Brahms and Avins p 288 Later Brahms s Hungarian Dances for piano four hands were highly profitable for him and his publisher Simrock Litzmann p 159 Brahms and Avins p 187 Campbell Margaret 1981 The Great Violinists Doubleday Garden City NY p 76 Brahms and Avins p 180 Brahms and Avins p 189 a b Brahms and Avins p 190 Litzmann pp 172 173 Brahms and Avins pp 217 222 223 Avins puts the fault on Otten Litzmann pp 200 201 a b Brahms and Avins p 224 Brahms and Avins p 335 Brahms and Avins p 337 Brahms and Avins p 190 Avins does not comment on how the 1874 performance was received Brahms and Avins p 531 In 1887 1892 he conducted the Berlin Philharmonic founded not long before in 1882 which gained repute under him Hans von Bulow s Letters to Johannes Brahms A Research Edition ed Hans Joachim Hinrichsen transl Cynthia Klohr 2012 Scarecrow Press Lanham MD p 11 Brahms and Avins pp 593 594 Phillip Huscher About the cover Harmony Forum of the Symphony Orchestra Institute 2012 1 Avins Styra Johannes Brahms in Oxford Companion to Music ed Alison Latham Oxford University Press 2003 ISBN 978 0 19 866212 9 The New York Review of Books July 11 2013 Hunt J A Gallic Trio Charles Munch Paul Paray Pierre Monteux John Hunt 2003 2009 p165 Conrad Wilson Notes on Brahms 20 Crucial Works Edinboro Saint Andrew Press 2005 p 16 Haywood Tony BRAHMS Piano Concertos Freire CD review www musicweb international com MusicWeb International Retrieved 17 February 2019 Sources Edit Brahms Johannes Avins Styra 1997 Johannes Brahms Life and Letters at Google Books selected and annotated by Styra Avins transl by Josef Eisinger and S Avins Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 924773 0 Frisch Walter and Karnes Kevin C eds Brahms and His World Revised Edition Princeton University Press 2009 a Google book Gal Hans 1971 Johannes Brahms His Work and Personality translated by Joseph Stein Knopf New York Litzmann Berthold 1913 Clara Schumann An Artist s Life based on material found in Diaries and Letters Translated and abridged from the fourth German edition by Grace E Hadow MacMillan London and Breitkopf and Hartel Leipzig 1913 vol 2 Vol 1 is about her life up to 1850 before meeting Brahms in 1853 External links EditBrahms Orchestral Works free music score of this composition available In public domain Piano Concerto No 1 Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Piano Concerto No 1 on YouTube played by Artur Rubinstein Fritz Reiner Chicago Symphony Orchestra Piano Concerto No 1 played by Claudio Arrau Carlo Maria Giulini Philharmonia Orchestra Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Piano Concerto No 1 Brahms amp oldid 1124623638, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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